• Sonuç bulunamadı

The Yörüks of Ottoman Western Thrace in the sixteenth century

N/A
N/A
Protected

Academic year: 2021

Share "The Yörüks of Ottoman Western Thrace in the sixteenth century"

Copied!
262
0
0

Yükleniyor.... (view fulltext now)

Tam metin

(1)

THE YÖRÜKS OF OTTOMAN WESTERN THRACE IN THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY

A Ph.D. Dissertation

by HARUN YENİ

Department of History İhsan Doğramacı Bilkent University

Ankara January 2013

(2)
(3)
(4)

THE YÖRÜKS OF OTTOMAN WESTERN THRACE IN THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY

Graduate School of Economics and Social Sciences of

İhsan Doğramacı Bilkent University by

HARUN YENİ

In Partial Fullfilment of the Requirements for the Degree of DOCTOR OF PHILOSOPHY

in

THE DEPARTMENT OF HISTORY İHSAN DOĞRAMACI BİLKENT UNİVERSİTY

ANKARA January 2013

(5)

I certify that I have read this thesis and have found that it is fully adequate in scope and in quality, as a thesis for the degree of the Doctor of Philosophy in History.

--- Prof. Dr. Halil İnalcık Supervisor

I certify that I have read this thesis and have found that it is fully adequate in scope and in quality, as a thesis for the degree of the Doctor of Philosophy in History.

--- Prof. Dr. Özer Ergenç

Examining Committee Member

I certify that I have read this thesis and have found that it is fully adequate in scope and in quality, as a thesis for the degree of the Doctor of Philosophy in History.

--- Prof. Dr. Mehmet Öz

Examining Committee Member

I certify that I have read this thesis and have found that it is fully adequate in scope and in quality, as a thesis for the degree of the Doctor of Philosophy in History. ---

Asst. Prof. Evgeni Radushev Examining Committee Member

I certify that I have read this thesis and have found that it is fully adequate in scope and in quality, as a thesis for the degree of the Doctor of Philosophy in History.

--- Asst. Prof. Berrak Burçak Examining Committee Member

Approval of the Graduate School of Economics and Social Sciences

--- Prof. Dr. Erdal Erel Director

(6)

iii

ABSTRACT

THE YÖRÜKS OF OTTOMAN WESTERN THRACE IN THE SIXTEENTH CENTURY Yeni, Harun

Ph.D., Department of History Supervisor: Prof. Dr. Halil İnalcık

January 2013

This study essentially questions the nature of the yörük population in Ottoman western Thrace through an examination of fiscal and military registers of the sixteenth century. Firstly, through a discussion of the terminology used for mobile social groups in other disciplines, such as anthropology and geography, it is revealed that there is no terminological consensus, but rather a variety within and among the terms used. In parallel with this theoretical background, it is argued that the concept of variety occupied an important role in yörüks’ ways of life in the region in question. This is also reflected in the manners in which they were registered, though a different manner of registration did not necessarily signify a different way of life. In this particular sphere, the yörük groups examined are those of the districts of Demürhisar, Drama, Yenice-i Karasu, and Gümülcine.

Next, the military nature of these yörüks is analyzed. The origins and formation of the yörük organization in Rumelia are discussed through the case of

(7)

iv

western Thrace. Similarities with and differences from other auxiliary forces are also investigated in connection with the question of origins and formation. The regulations issued for the yörüks as a military group and the changes that occurred over time are looked at so as to be able to see any differentiation. The extent of militarization among the yörüks in the region is evaluated through the classical fiscal surveys and the yörük registers, with a revisional approach to the literature being taken. Within this scope, the nature of the yörük registers is questioned, and the correlation between registered and unregistered yörüks is revealed.

Keywords: yörük, Ottoman Rumelia, western Thrace, eastern Macedonia, Demürhisar, Drama, Yenice-i Karasu, Gümülcine, the yörük organization, defter-i

(8)

v

ÖZET

ONALTINCI YÜZYILDA OSMANLI BATI TRAKYASI YÖRÜKLERİ Yeni, Harun

Doktora, Tarih Bölümü Tez Yöneticisi: Prof. Dr. Halil İnalcık

Ocak 2013

Bu çalışma esas olarak onaltıncı yüzyıla ait mâli ve askerî kayıtlar üzerinden Osmanlı Batı Trakyası’ndaki yörüklerin mahiyetini sorgulamaktadır. İlk önce, antropoloji ve coğrafya gibi diğer disiplinlerde hareketli sosyal topluluklar için kullanılan kavramlar hakkındaki mevcut tartışmalar sunularak, terminoloji üzerinde bir uzlaşma olmadığı ve hem kavramların kendi içinde hem de kavramlar arasında bir çeşitliliğin mevcut olduğu ortaya konulmuştur. Bu teorik arka plana paralel olarak, çeşitlilik mefhumunun yörüklerin yaşam biçimlerinde önemli bir rol oynadığı savunulmaktadır. Bu durum yörüklerin kaydedilme biçimlerine de yansımakla beraber, her farklı kayıt biçimi farklı bir yaşam biçimi anlamına da gelmemektedir. Demürhisar, Drama, Yenice-i Karasu ve Gümülcine kazâlarındaki yörük varlığı bu bağlam içerisinde değerlendirilmiştir.

Sonrasında, bu bölgelerdeki yörüklerin askerî boyutu irdelenmiştir. Batı Trakya örneği üzerinden Osmanlı Rumelisi’ndeki yörük teşkilatının kökenleri ve

(9)

vi

kuruluşu meseleleri tartışılmıştır. Bu bağlamda teşkilatın çağdaş diğer yardımcı kuvvetlerle benzerlik ve farklılıkları da değerlendirilmiştir. Yörük teşkilatı için hâsıl olan kanunlar ile zamanla bu kanunlarda yapılan değişiklikler, süreç içerisinde teşkilatta meydana gelen değişmeleri görmek açısından ele alınmıştır. Askerîliğin bölgedeki yörükler arasındaki boyutları, tahrir kayıtları ve yörük defterleri üzerinden literatüre revizyonist bir yaklaşımla değerlendirilmiştir. Bununla bağlantılı olarak yörük defterlerinin yapısı sorgulanmış ve askerî olarak kaydedilen yörüklerle kaydedilmeyenler arasındaki ilişki ortaya konulmuştur.

Anahtar Kelimeler: yörük, Osmanlı Rumelisi, Batı Trakya, Doğu Makedonya, Drama, Demürhisar, Yenice-i Karasu, Gümülcine, yörük teşkilatı, defter-i yörükân, göçebelik, transhumans.

(10)

vii

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

This research, while an individual work, has come into existence with the support of several people. First, I would like to express gratitude to my supervisor Prof. Halil İnalcık, with whom I had the chance to work since 2003. He exemplifies the high quality scholarship to which I, and all the Ottomanists, aspire. His intimate attention throughout the study motivated me for the better. His guiding suggestions and inspiring ideas contributed a lot to the development of this research. I would like to thank Prof. Evgeni Radushev with my whole heart for standing by me since my arrival at the department. My acquaintance with the primary sources as a M.A. student, which turned into a venture of years, was possible thanks to him. His valuable suggestions, attentive warnings, and insightful opinions played important roles at every stage of this study. It was his enthusiasm which encouraged me to complete this project. I am honored and lucky to feel that he was present whenever I needed him not only as a mentor but as a friend and as a father. I would also like to express my gratitude to Prof. Özer Ergenç, to whom I had the chance to consult whenever I needed. His immense knowledge in Ottoman social and economic history guided me when I was confused by kanunnâme excerpts. He was always kind enough to share his time generously. I am honored to have Prof. Ergenç in my jury. I am also grateful to Prof. Mehmet Öz, who was present

(11)

viii

from the first steps of this process. His valuable comments and criticism upon the sources, method, and the edition of the text led me to improve them. I was truly honored to have Dr. Berrak Burçak among my dissertation committee members. It was her courtesy to accept it. I would like to thank Dr. Oktay Özel, whose support I felt closely both as a professor and as a friend during my stay at Bilkent. He provided me with his guidance during this project by means of his valuable comments. Despite his busy agenda, he was kind enough to edit my article text. He was always present at my joys and sorrows. I would like to express gratitude to Dr. Paul Latimer, who generously spent his time in editing and shaping my article. It is not possible to give his dues in the finalization of the paper. I thank Dr. Evgenia Kermeli whose support I felt since M.A. years. I should also mention Dr. Mehmet Kalpaklı, Cadoc Leighton, David Thornton, Ahmet Simin, Akif Kireççi and Edward Kohn of the Department of History for their supports in various occasions. I am also indebted to Dr. Phokion Kotzageorgis for his constructive comments on my topic and for his valuable friendship.

I have also received a great deal of help and support from some other institutions and individuals. I am deeply greatful to BDAGM. Osmanlı Arşiv Dairesi Başkanlığı and Cumhuriyet Arşivi Daire Başkanlığı, TKGM. Kuyûd-i Kadime Arşivi and their officers. I thank İ.D. Bilkent University for providing me various facilities and resources since 1999. Altın Koza [İpek] University together with its faculty and administrative personnel gave support to which I am indebted. I also thank Turkish Cultural Foundation for the fellowship I was granted in 2010. I am obliged to thank to Eser Berkel Sunar, Birsen Çınar, Ece Türk, Nebahat Öksüz, Funda Yılmaz, and Nimet Kaya for their sincere help as administrative assistants.

(12)

ix

My thanks are also due to a number of friends. Yakup Turali has always been a real brother with his constant support for around twentyfive years, and he has a great share in this dissertation, as well. Ali Erdurmuş and İlker Daştan, as my old friends, stood by me and gave me energy whenever I was exhausted. It is not actually possible to utter Neslihan Demirkol and Ayşegül Avcı’s shares adequately. They turned the writing process into a more bearable one and did their best to comfort and help me whenever I needed. I should also mention Fatma Gül Karagöz, who helped me a lot especially with some French texts together with Neslihan. Polat Safi and Fatih Durgun are two other precious friends who bore the burden of this study upon their shoulders together with me. Sessions of discussions, motivation, and scheduling with them lie beneath this dissertation. Elvin Otman, who was always at a distance of call and eager to help, made Bilkent days more enjoyable with her company. I thank a lot to Işık Demirakın and Nergiz Nazlar for their valuable friendship; our chats were moments of relief from distress. Evrim Tekin made her support felt all the time. I am indebted to Agata Chimel, who was kind enough to proofread my article. Michael D. Sheridan accepted the tiring task of editing this dissertation, though being already busy; I am sincerely grateful to him. I should also express my gratitude to Sinan Günçiner for his valuable help in the preparation of maps. I thank Theodosios Kyriakidis, Alexandros Kastrinakis, and Niyazi Karan for making my stay in Salonica comfortable and enjoyable. I would also like to thank to Emrah Safa Gürkan, Sena Hatip Dinçyürek, Gürer Karagedikli, Alphan Akgül, Aslıhan Aksoy Sheridan, Cumhur Bekar, Selim Tezcan, Yücel Yeni, Esra Erkoç Ataoğlu, Baybars Ataoğlu, Veysel Şimşek, Grigor Boykov, Mariya Kiprovska, Cansu Begüm Erkoç, Hasan Çolak, Ayşegül Keskin Çolak, Erdem

(13)

x

Sönmez, Muhsin Soyudoğan, Elif Boyacıoğlu, Doğuş Özdemir, Esra Demirkol, H. Gülşen Birinci, Zeki Sarıgil.

My special thanks are to my family for everything I have in my life. Erkan Yeni, Ahmet Yeni and Yusuf Baykal will always be remembered.

This dissertation is heartily dedicated to Seda Erkoç, whose constant support enabled me to materialize it.

(14)

xi

TABLE OF CONTENTS

ABSTRACT ... iii ÖZET ... v ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ... vii TABLE OF CONTENTS ... xi

LIST OF TABLES ... xiii

LIST OF FIGURES ... xiv

LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS ... xv

CHAPTER I: INTRODUCTION ... 1

1.1. Scope and Questions ... 1

1.2. Sources and Methodology ... 6

1.3. The Yörüks: A Review of the Literature ... 11

CHAPTER II: YÖRÜKS AS A SOCIAL GROUP ... 41

2.1. Theoretical Dimensions of the Issue ... 41

2.1.1. Nomadism as a vague term ... 43

2.1.2. Nomadism and Pastoralism ... 45

2.1.3. Mobility as a determinant ... 48

2.1.4. Transhumance and its variations ... 49

2.1.5. The intersection of terms and their variety ... 52

2.2. Parallels and Differences in the Yörüks’ Ways of Life and in Defters ... 58

CHAPTER III: CLASSIFICATION OF YÖRÜKS ACCORDING TO REGISTERS 62 3.1. Varieties in the Registration of Yörüks and in their Way of Life ... 62

3.2. Separately registered cema‘âts ... 63

3.3. Cema‘âts registered with villages ... 79

3.3.1. Cases in the Demürhisar region ... 79

3.3.2. Cases in the Drama region ... 83

3.3.3. Cases in the Yenice-i Karasu region ... 98

3.3.4. Cases in the Gümülcine region ... 112

(15)

xii

3.5. Yörük villages/mezra‘âs ... 134

CHAPTER IV: YÖRÜKS AS A MILITARY GROUP ... 152

4.1. Yörük Organization: Origin and Formation... 152

4.2. Other Auxiliaries and the Yörük Organization ... 163

4.3. Structure of and Changes in the Yörük Organization through Regulations 166 4.4. Extent of Militarization: A Revision of General Perception ... 175

4.5. Creating Militaries from non-Militaries: Difference, Correlation, and Its Causes ... 199

CHAPTER V: CONCLUSION ... 213

BIBLIOGRAPHY ... 219

APPENDICES ... 235

APPENDIX – A: Identified Settlements in Drama ... 236

APPENDIX – B: Identified Settlements in Demürhisar ... 237

APPENDIX – C: Identified Settlements in Gümülcine ... 238

APPENDIX – D: Identified Settlements in Yenice-i Karasu ... 239

APPENDIX – E: Kanunnâme-i Defter-i Yörükân-i Tanrıdağı (1544) ... 240

(16)

xiii

LIST OF TABLES

Table 1 - Distribution of population in the Yenice-i Karasu and Gümülcine kazâs in

1530 ... 2

Table 2 - Distribution of Muslim population in Yenice-i Karasu and Gümülcine [in nefers] ... 3

Table 3 - List of tahrir registers used and the kazâs they cover ... 6

Table 4 - List of yörük registers used ... 9

Table 5 - Cemaâts registered in Agrican in 1562/63 ... 64

Table 6 - Cemaâts of Demürhisar registered in Selânik in 1613 (1568-69) ... 64

Table 7 - Comparison of yörük groups of Eğri Bucak ... 66

Table 8 - Cema‘âts in Gümülcine ... 78

Table 9 - Settlements with yörük groups in Drama ... 83

Table 10 – Ratio between the yörüks registered as cema‘âts with villages and the Muslim reâyâ in Yenice-i Karasu in 1530 ... 99

Table 11 - Ratio between the yörüks registered as cema‘âts with villages and the Muslim reâyâ in Yenice-i Karasu in 1568 ... 104

Table 12 - Changes in ratio between the yörüks registered as cema‘âts with villages and the Muslim reâyâ in Yenice-i Karasu ... 110

Table 13 - Ratio between the yörüks registered as cema‘âts with villages and the Muslim reâyâ in Gümülcine in 1530 ... 113

Table 14 - Ratio between the yörüks registered as cema‘âts with villages and the Muslim reâyâ in Gümülcine in 1568 ... 116

Table 15 - Changes in ratios between the yörüks registered as cema‘âts with villages and the Muslim reâyâ in Gümülcine ... 123

Table 16 –Yörük villages/mezra‘âs ... 135

Table 17 - The synopses of Kırlı in 1529 and 1568 ... 137

Table 18 - Demographic structure of yörük settlements in Gümülcine ... 145

Table 19 - Agricultural production in some yörük villages in Gümülcine ... 150

Table 20 - Distribution of settlement units of yamaks registered in Drama in 1586 ... 192

(17)

xiv

LIST OF FIGURES

Figure 1 - Hâsıl of the village of Eğri Bucak ... 67

Figure 2 - The route of transhumance of Cema'ât-i Mürsellü ... 72

Figure 3 - The village of Lepoşniçe ... 81

Figure 4 - The villages of the Cema'ât-i Kara Lütfi ... 82

Figure 5 - Ratio between the yörüks registered as cema‘âts with villages and the Muslim reâyâ in Yenice-i Karasu in 1530 ... 102

Figure 6 - Ratio between the yörüks registered as cema‘âts with villages and the Muslim reâyâ in Yenice-i Karasu in 1568 ... 106

Figure 7 - Ratio between the yörüks registered as cema‘âts with villages and the Muslim reâyâ in Gümülcine in 1530 ... 115

Figure 8 - Ratio between the yörüks registered as cema‘âts with villages and the Muslim reâyâ in Gümülcine in 1568 ... 119

Figure 9 - Routes of the Ottoman movement in the Balkans ... 161

Figure 10 - Distribution of yörük ocaks according to 1544 registers ... 162

Figure 11 - The distribution of settlements of yamaks under the title of Drama according to TT. 1008 dated 1586 ... 197

Figure 12 - The distribution of settlements of yamaks under the title of Drama according to TT. 1008 dated 1586 ... 198

(18)

xv

LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS

h. hâne

mcr. mücerred

m. mücerred [when transcripted from primary source]

ç. çift bn. bennâk bv. bive k. kile nd. nâm-i diger n. nim çift mz. mezra‘â

YK. Yenice-i Karasu

D. Drama G. Gümülcine

DH. Demürhisar

TT.d. Tapu Tahrir defteri

BOA. Başbakanlık Osmanlı Arşivi

TKGM. Tapu Kadastro Genel Müdürlüğü

(19)

1

CHAPTER I

INTRODUCTION

1.1. Scope and Questions

It is a well-known phenomenon that the Ottoman march on European soil1 was

followed by an intense population influx. As one of the directions of the Ottoman movement, the ancient Via Egnatia, or the Sol-Kol part of the movement, was no exception to this. On the contrary, this route was one of the most attractive, and a significant number of new settlements were established along it following the military advance. Among the influx of demographic components in this region, the

yörüks played a significant role. Their position during and just after the period of

conquest period has been an issue much emphasized in historical debates.2

However, for subsequent periods, the yörüks and their structure within the demography of the region remain rather vague. This is especially true for the western Thrace region, where a significant yörük population was present from the

1 For an updated chronology and narration of the initial phases of the Ottoman movement in Thrace and the Balkans, see articles “Orhan” and “Murad I” in Halil İnalcık, Kuruluş Dönemi Osmanlı Sultanları, 1302-1481 (İstanbul: İslam Araştırmaları Merkezi, 2010).; and also see Halil İnalcık, "Rumeli," in Encyclopaedia of Islam, 2nd edition(Leiden: Brill).; Halil İnalcık, "Gelibolu," in Encyclopaedia of Islam, 2nd edition(Leiden: Brill).

2 See section “1.3. The Yörüks: A Review of the Literature” for studies on the role of yörüks during the conquest and following periods.

(20)

very early shown bel of the yörü Table 1 - In population 3 167 Numa (Ankara: T.C From now o y phases of low, for the

üks in the fi Distribution Yenice-i K n, while in G aralı Defter-i M C. Başbakanlık on referred as the Ottom e districts o irst half of t n of populati Karasu, the y Gümülcine Muhâsebe-i Vi k Devlet Arşiv BOA. TT.d. 1 2 man presenc of Yenice-i K the 16th cen ion in the Ye yörüks acco they repres ilâyet-i Rumili vleri Genel Mu 67. ce in the Ba Karasu and ntury in rur enice-i Karas

ount for alm sent nearly i (937/1530) üdürlüğü, Osm alkans. The Gümülcine al life in we su and Gümü most one-fi one-third: [Dizin ve Tıpk manlı Arşivi D population e, show the estern Thra ülcine kazâs fifth of the kıbasım]. II vo Daire Başkanlı n figures position ce.3 in 1530 Muslim ols., vol. I ığı, 2003).

(21)

Table 2 - D It population the Balkan nomadic n evolved fo what is pr blurred or That is to has led re nomadic o pastoral n this way o evaluating all as a sin the follow nomadism establish a Yörüks 1240 18% Distribution is importa n in terms o ns. The ter nature. In o orm of nom roblematic r even igno say, the fa esearchers n or sedentar nomadism o of life over g all yörüks ngle social g wing chapte m through an initial gu Yenice-i n of Muslim p nt to evalu of placing t rm yörük is other words madism, an i with such a ored to a gr ct that they not to cons ry element outlined and r time have entirely in group living er of the pre anthropolo uideline. In Karasu 3 population in uate the na them within s usually th s, the yörük interpretati a perceptio reat extent, y are percei sider the ot t – as much d shaped th e been larg terms of p g virtually t esent study ogical and g n this way, i Muslim reâyâ 5714 82% Y n Yenice-i Ka ature of su n the contex hought of in ks’ way of li ion which i on is that th , precisely b ived and de ther compl h as it sho he yörük gro ely ignored pastoral nom the same wa y discusses geographica it will be sh Yörüks 1112 30% arasu and Gü uch a large xt of the Ot n terms of fe is usually s more or le he other as because of fined as sem imentary h uld be. Wh ups, variati d. Basically, madism and ay of life. In the range o al studies s own that th Gümülci ümülcine [in proportion ttoman pre f its nomad y understo less valid. H spect of the this point mi-nomadic half – i.e., t hile it is cl ions and ch , this is a r d considerin n parallel w of terms re so as to be he literatur M ine n nefers] n of the esence in dic/semi-od as an However, eir life is of view. c groups the non-ear that anges in result of ng them with this, elated to e able to re agrees Muslim reâyâ 2568 70%

(22)

4

on the existence of varieties both within and among the relevant terms. Following this, the yörüks will be discussed as one particular case through the lens of this concept of varieties.

In connection with these discussions, it should be stated that the sixteenth-century fiscal registers for Ottoman western Thrace imply a rather different picture than what historiography has generally presented regarding Rumelian yörüks. The

tahrir registers give the impression that, within the region under consideration

here, the groups called “yörük” were not all homogeneous and did not all lead the same way of life. As such, the basic question when dealing with the yörüks – at least for the region in question – becomes: Which yörük? The third chapter will focus on these varieties and categorize them accordingly. Differences and similarities between and within these categories will be presented, and in this way it will be proven that the yörüks of the Rumelia region in the sixteenth-century Ottoman state did not all lead the same way of life. There is no doubt that this fact sheds light upon the nature of the demographic structure of Ottoman western Thrace, and to some extent Rumelia as a whole, in the sixteenth century.

Apart from the distinction mentioned above, there seems to have been another distinction as well; namely, the distinction between military and non-military yörüks. The yörüks in Rumelia are known to have been organized into ocaks for military purposes, mainly as auxiliary forces. In parallel with this purpose, there are yörük defters from the mid-sixteenth century to the early seventeenth century covering the records of these units. Although it is not stated directly in the related literature, it is a fact that not all of the yörüks were of military aspect. The detailed surveys (mufassal tahrirs) lead us to such a conclusion. When the number of military

(23)

5

units’ members was lacking, the ocaks were filled out with other yörüks. In other words, the remaining part of the yörüks constituted a kind of reservoir. Examples of such cases can be seen in the mühimme registers, where non-military elements were called haymâne and the central government issued orders for the responsible officers to fill out the lacking ocaks. In sum, the chapter devoted to the military aspect of the yörüks aims to show and to emphasize that the variety in the yörük population of the region existed in terms of military structure as well. The chapter argues that the yörüks of the region, though perceived as being of an entirely military nature, were not in fact within the auxiliary military structure as a whole. In parallel with this, the extent of militarization and the mutual connection between military and non-military yörüks will also be discussed. Additionally, the structure and distribution of the yörük population in administrative units – i.e., in

kazâs and nâhiyes – as recorded in military registers will be analyzed through the

marginal notes, and thus it will be shown, through marginal notes regarding householders, that the military-administrative division of yörüks in the organization did not match their actual dwelling pattern.

Thus, as a whole, this study evaluates the presence of yörük groups in sixteenth-century Ottoman western Thrace mainly through fiscal and military registers and in terms of their socioeconomic structure and military organization. Variations in their ways of life and how these are reflected in the sources, along with the nature and extent of their militarization, will be discussed and analyzed throughout the course of the study.

(24)

6 1.2. Sources and Methodology

In parallel with the questions mentioned above, two basic primary source series are used in this study; namely, tahrir defters (fiscal registers) and yörük defters (registers of militarily organized yörüks). In addition to these, entries from certain mühimme registers are utilized, especially for the military organization of the yörüks in the region.

The nature of yörüks as a social group and the variations in their ways of life

are analyzed and questioned primarily through fiscal registers. Below is the list of these sources and the regions that these cover:

Table 3 - List of tahrir registers used and the kazâs they cover

Date/ Number/

Type

Gümülcine Yenice-i

Karasu Drama Demürhisar

1478 TT.d. 7 mufassal --- X (partially) X X 1519 TT.d. 70 icmal X X X X 1529 TT.d. 403 mufassal --- --- X (partially) X 1529 TT.d. 3744 mufassal --- --- X --- 1530 TT.d. 167 muhâsebe icmal X X X X 1530 TT.d. 370 muhâsebe icmal

covering Paşa sancağı sağ kol kazâları

(25)

7 1557 TT.d. 306 mufassal evkâf X (partially) X (partially) --- --- 1560s TT.d. 979 mufassal evkâf X (partially) X (partially) --- --- 1562/63 TT.d.341 mufassal evkâf X (partially) --- --- --- 1568 TT.d. 187 mufassal X X --- X 1568 TT.d. 194 mufassal --- --- X --- 1568 TT.d. 577 mufassal evkâf X (partially) X (partially) X (partially) X (partially) 16135 TT.d. 723 mufassal Selânik

Through these registers of various kinds, as will be seen in the following sections, the aim is to trace changes in the socioeconomic and demographic structures of

yörük groups and of those settlements which are in one way or another related to yörük presence in the region. Comparisons from various defters are used where

possible in order to follow changes over time. The demographic and economic pictures of the yörüks are combined so as to arrive at a more meaningful explanation and description. Variations in the yörüks’ ways of life through and within variations in manners in which they were registered will thereby be revealed.

5 Since this defter is a copy of Tapu Kadastro Genel Müdürlüğü, Kuyûd-i Kadîme Arşivi (from now on TKGM. KKA.) TT.d. 186 dated 1568, it should also be considered as dated 1568.

(26)

8

It should also be noted that, although the concentration is on the sixteenth century, registers from the fifteenth century are also employed when needed so as to observe fragments relevant that period as well.

As can be noticed, there are two registers which do not cover the regions in question. One of them, TT.d. 723 – which is an exact copy of TT.d. 186 dated 1568 – is used to trace certain cemaâts which were registered in the Selânik region despite being recorded in Demürhisar in a previous register. Also, a fragment of a

kanunnâme dealing with the military organization of the yörüks of the Vize district,

from the muhâsebe icmal defteri numbered 370 and dated 1530, is used in order to exemplify the regulations of and changes in the organization.

The military organization of yörüks is outlined and discussed using a number of primary sources. Among these are general and provincial kanunnâmes of different dates, mühimme entries, and yörük defters. Barkan’s6 and Akgündüz’s7 kanunnâme collections, as well as Ahmet Refik’s edition of mühimme entries on yörüks,8 are among the published primary sources used. Additionally, three

collections of two mühimme defters9 published by the Prime Ministerial Ottoman

Archives (Başbakanlık Osmanlı Arşivi) are utilized. Among the primary sources used

6 Ömer Lûtfi Barkan, XV ve XVI. Asırlarda Osmanlı İmparatorluğu'nda Ziraî Ekonominin Hukukî ve Malî

Esasları: 1. Kanunlar (İstanbul: Bürhaneddin Matbaası, 1943).

7 Ahmet Akgündüz, Osmanlı Kanunnâmeleri ve Hukuki Tahlilleri, 8 vols. (İstanbul: FEY Vakfı, 1990-1994).

8 Ahmet Refik, Anadolu'da Türk Aşiretleri (966-1200), 2nd ed. (İstanbul: Enderun Kitabevi, 1989). 9 7 Numaralı Mühimme Defteri (975-976/1567-1569) [Özet-Transkripsiyon-İndeks]. III vols., vol. II (Ankara: T.C. Başbakanlı Devlet Arşivleri Genel Müdürlüğü Osmanlı Arşivi Daire Başkanlığı, 1999)., 7 Numaralı Mühimme Defteri (975-976 / 1567–1569) [Özet-Transkripsiyon-İndeks]. III vols., vol. III (Ankara: T.C. Başbakanlık Devlet Arşivleri Genel Müdürlüğü Osmanlı Arşivi Daire Başkanlığı, 1999); 12 Numaralı Mühimme Defteri (978-979 / 1570–1572) [Özet-Transkripsiyon-İndeks]. II vols., vol. I (Ankara: T.C. Başbakanlık Devlet Arşivleri Genel Müdürlüğü Osmanlı Arşivi Daire Başkanlığı, 1996).

(27)

9

in the sections related to military organization, the series of yörük registers (defter-i

yörükân) occupy the central position. It should be stated that these registers usually

have kanunnâmes included at the beginning. It will be beneficial here to give a list of the yörük defters used in this study, together with their dates and the yörük group they cover:

Table 4 - List of yörük registers used

Number Date Group

TT.d. 225 1544 Tanrıdağı yörüks TT.d. 230 1544 Tanrıdağı yörüks TT.d. 1008 1568 Tanrıdağı yörüks TT.d. 631 1591 Tanrıdağı yörüks TT.d. 774 1641 Tanrıdağı yörüks TT.d. 357 1565 Naldögen yörüks TT.d. 616 1585 Naldögen yörüks TT.d. 685 1596 Naldögen yörüks TT.d. 303 1557 Vize yörüks TT.d. 354 1566 Ofçabolu yörüks TT.d. 614 1584 Kocacık yörüks

Because of the fact that the Tanrıdağı yörük group is dispersed primarily throughout the four regions of Yenice-i Karasu, Gümülcine, Drama, and Demürhisar, their registers are the ones that are predominantly used here. Since the other yörük groups were also a part of the same structure, their regulations are also employed so as to see variations and changes and to crosscheck the regulations for the

(28)

10

Tanrıdağı yörüks. Although these registers are categorized under the Tapu Tahrir

Defteri section of the Prime Ministerial Ottoman Archives, they are not in fact of

the same nature as the fiscal surveys generally alluded to by the abbreviation TT.d. For this reason, an additional phrase, “defter-i yörükân”, is merged into the references made to them.

In relation to the usage of these registers, two primary techniques are employed, as is touched upon in the relevant section. In one of these, through a comparison of yörük defters and tahrir defters, it is revealed that not all yörüks were a part of the military organization. The basic parameter in this analysis is whether

yörük householders’ names in the tahrir registers bear such marginal notes as

“eşkünci” and “yamak”. In a yörük group, some householders have such notes while others do not. The comparison of yörük numbers in tahrir registers and yörük defters thus suggests that the military organization did not include all yörüks as its members. Although their ratios varied regionally, it will be shown that they were not entirely military, which is what is generally assumed in literature. Additionally, such a comparison will show that there exists a kind of ambiguity in the yörüks’ numbers, leading to the assumption that certain yörüks invisible in the registers must have existed. As such, it is impossible to arrive at a definite number for these groups in the region in question.

Secondly, through an analysis of yörük defters in terms of settlement units, it will be shown that yörük defters do not reflect a demographic picture in a given

kazâ in terms of yörük presence. In a defter-i yörükân, the organization is registered

in ocaks consisting of eşküncis and yamaks, whose numbers varied over time. These

(29)

11

administrative reasons. This fact gives the impression that the members of these

ocaks registered under a certain kazâ were resident in these kazâs, and can therefore

be assumed as dwellers in that kazâ. As additional data, it should be mentioned that on the margins of the names of its members are noted whether they were eşküncis or yamaks, the settlement unit they lived in, or the cemaât to which they belonged. Through such marginal notes will be determined the rate of the settlements or

cemaâts which are registered within the same kazâ. The analysis of these data has

revealed that the yamaks and eşküncis recorded within a district in a yörük defteri resided in various districts (kazâs). As such, their registration in a certain district did not mean that they were settled in that district. As a result, it can be deduced that these registers are not reliable sources for a demographic picture of the yörüks of a given region.

1.3. The Yörüks: A Review of the Literature

As a group, the yörüks have been handled within Ottoman historiography through various points of focus and approaches. While in some studies they have been fit into questions concerning the emergence of the Ottoman entity, some other studies have dealt with their crucial role in the state structure as both a social group and a military group. Although this evaluation of the literature will try to stick to the historical sequence due to the variety of focal points in studies on the yörüks, it will not review them through the eyes of periodization. Instead, these studies will be categorized according to their themes and manner of handling the yörük issue, covering yörük groups not only in Rumelia but also in Anatolia.

(30)

12

The crucial role of the yörüks within the structure of the Ottoman state can be traced back to that state’s formative years as an emirate. In connection with this, the yörüks have been a sub-issue within the agenda of Ottomanists representing a wide range of dimensions and points of interest in this period. Studies on the Ottoman foundational problem situate these semi-nomadic elements within this process in a variety of different ways. One of the first studies on this question, H. A. Gibbons’ work, mentions semi-nomadic groups as the actual constitution of the newcomers to Anatolia who later mixed with the existing population to form a new race called “Ottoman”10. On the other hand, Langer and Blake point out that “the

first sultans had more than a mere horde of nomads to rely upon”11 as the source of

their military force. However, they criticize Gibbons for his overemphasis on nomadic groups in the foundational process. Köprülü’s monography12 responded to

Gibbons by placing the semi-nomadic groups within the framework of the ethnicity of the Ottomans as Turkish. Because Gibbons claims that the ethnicity of the new state was not Turkish but rather a mixture, Köprülü’s study is a kind of refutation of his argument. Especially in the chapters on the socio-economic conditions of thirteenth-century Anatolia13 and on the military and administrative organization

of the frontier lifestyle,14 the fundamental position of the semi-nomadic groups is

given emphasis. Paul Wittek’s argument introduces the famous discussion of the

10 Herbert Adams Gibbons, The Foundation of the Ottoman Empire, a History of the Osmanlis up to the

Death of Bayezid I (1300-1403), by Herbert Adams Gibbons (Oxford: the Clarendon Press, 1916).

11 William L. Langer and Robert P. Blake, "The Rise of the Ottoman Turks and Its Historical Background," The American Historical Review 37, no. 3 (1932): 504.

12 Mehmet Fuad Köprülü, Osmanlı Devleti'nin Kuruluşu, 3rd ed. (Türk Tarih Kurumu Basımevi, 1988). 13 Ibid., 46-49.

(31)

13

holy war (gazâ) theory and includes semi-nomadic groups within his discussion of the nature of the gazâ and of the religious warriors called gâzis15. In Vryonis’ study,

an emphasis on the Byzantine decline is accompanied by a discussion of the flow of the Turkmens into Anatolia.16 In İnalcık, together with his discussion of the gazâ

theory and its connection with the Turkmens and their leaders, the pivotal issue of the influx of the Turkmens into Anatolia and the subsequent waves of migration into the Bithynia region emerge as the fundamental points within a multi-dimensional analysis of the issue.17 The pressure of the migrating Turkmen

population is shown to have played a crucial role in the foundation and subsequent period of Ottoman movement. Rudi Paul Lindner questions tribal identity within the framework of Wittek’s gazâ theory, stressing the anthropological dimension of these Turkmen groups in the foundational process.18 He argues that the inclusive

nature of tribes in the period in question shaped the nature of the Ottoman movement, in which semi-nomadic elements were among the most active. Kafadar’s and Lowry’s studies evaluate the existence of semi-nomadic groups exclusively within the framework of the gazâ theory. In Kafadar’s study, it is possible to

15 Paul Wittek, The Rise of the Ottoman Empire (B. Franklin, 1971).

16 Speros Vryonis, The Decline of Medieval Hellenism in Asia Minor: And the Process of Islamization from

the Eleventh through the Fifteenth Century (University of California Press, 1971).

17 Halil İnalcık, "The Question of the Emergence of the Ottoman State," International Journal of

Turkish Studies II, (1980): 71-79.

18 Rudi Paul Lindner, "What Was a Nomadic Tribe?," Comparative Studies in Society and History 24, no. 4 (1982); Rudi Paul Lindner, Nomads and Ottomans in Medieval Anatolia (Research Institute for Inner Asian Studies, Indiana University, 1983). Especially the first chapter of his book deals specifically with this issue.

(32)

14

observe an emphasis on İnalcık’s argument concerning the influx of the Turkmens as an influential factor in the foundation.19

The next step in both Ottoman history and Ottoman historiography in terms of the semi-nomadic elements present in the Ottoman state is the movement into the Balkans. The expansion of the Ottomans towards Thrace and the Balkans is articulated together with the deportation of many groups on European soil, in which semi-nomadic elements are included. The earliest reference to this process is from the fifteenth-century chronicle of Aşıkpaşazâde,20 which concerns Orhan’s

reign, and this point is emphasized by the scholars studying it. Tayyib Gökbilgin’s paper21 presented at the Third Congress of the Turkish Historical Society can be

seen as the first research paper to deal directly with the role of the yörüks in the settlement and Turkification of Rumelia. He evaluates the process from the first conquests on European territory through to the sixteenth century. Gökbilgin also mentions the formation and features of yörük organization in detail, an issue which will be touched upon in the following parts of the literature review.

Ö. L. Barkan’s series of articles on the deportation policy as a method of colonization and settlement in the Ottoman Empire proved to be among major studies on the issue22. Barkan explains that his study will focus on one of the basic

19 Cemal Kafadar, Between Two Worlds: The Construction of the Ottoman State (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1996)., Heath W. Lowry, The Nature of the Early Ottoman State (State University of New York Press, 2003).

20, Aşıkpaşazâde, Tevârih-i Âl-i Osman'dan Aşıkpaşazâde Tarihi (Istanbul: Matbaa-yi Âmire, 1914), 49. 21 M. Tayyib Gökbilgin, "Rumeli'nin İskânında ve Türkleşmesinde Yürükler," in III. Türk Tarih

Kongresi (Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu Basımevi, 1943).

22 Ömer Lûtfi Barkan, "Osmanlı İmparatorluğunda Bir İskân ve Kolonizasyon Metodu Olarak Sürgünler [Part 1]," İstanbul Üniversitesi İktisat Fakültesi Mecmuası 11, no. 524-69 (1949-50).; Ömer Lûtfi Barkan, "Osmanlı İmparatorluğu'nda Bir İskân ve Kolonizasyon Metodu Olarak Sürgünler [Part 2]," İstanbul Üniversitesi İktisat Fakültesi Mecmuası 13, (1952).; Ömer Lûtfi Barkan, "Osmanlı

(33)

15

reasons behind the success of the Ottoman enterprise; namely, the features of the demographic structure and the changes that occurred in it. According to Barkan, “the history of the empire’s formation is to some extent the history of the relocation of population groups and changes in their home, and thus the history of the establishment of new homelands in newly conquered lands.”23 He states that

in this series of articles, the intention is to analyze how the ways of deportation were used in the settlement and Turkification of Rumelia and in the foundation of such major Turkish cities as Istanbul, as well as other cultural and trade centers, and to analyze the results of these research questions.24

The second article in the series focuses broadly on the deportation of yörüks into Rumelia, featuring various cases of this from the fourteenth century onwards.25 The

third article begins with the evaluation of the deportation of another semi-nomadic group, the Tatars.26

Appearing around the same date, Münir Aktepe’s article is another fundamental study on the issue of settlement in Rumelia27. Like Barkan, Aktepe

situates semi-nomadic elements within the context of the mass migration and settlement of Turkish groups.

İmparatorluğunda Bir İskân ve Kolonizasyon Metodu Olarak Sürgünler [Part 3]," İstanbul Üniversitesi İktisat Fakültesi Mecmuası 14, no. 209-36 (1953-54).

23 Barkan, "Osmanlı İmparatorluğunda Bir İskân ve Kolonizasyon Metodu Olarak Sürgünler [Part 1]," 544.

24 Ibid., 545.

25 Barkan, "Osmanlı İmparatorluğu'nda Bir İskân ve Kolonizasyon Metodu Olarak Sürgünler [Part 2]." 65-78.

26 Barkan, "Osmanlı İmparatorluğunda Bir İskân ve Kolonizasyon Metodu Olarak Sürgünler [Part 3]," 209-213.

27 M. Münir Aktepe, "XIV. ve XV. Asırlarda Rumeli'nin Türkler Tarafından İskânına Dair," Türkiyât

(34)

16

Another study which emphasizes the role of semi-nomadic groups in the settlement process of the Ottoman Balkans is İnalcık’s “Ottoman Methods of Conquest”, which also appeared in the 1950s.28 Together with his analysis of the

Ottoman “method of gradual conquest” in the two distinct stages of “suzerainty” and “direct control”29, İnalcık reveals the changes that occurred in the newly

conquered lands through the examination of statistical surveys and other sources. Within this sphere, he considers “deportation and emigration as a tool of reorganization”30 to be a crucial point and emphasizes the role of semi-nomadic

elements within this process. Later studies related to the demographic aspect of the Ottoman expansion in the Balkans mostly rely, to a greater or lesser extent, on these basic studies.

As another point of focus in the Ottoman historiography on yörüks, studies on the existing yörük population in the Balkans occupy a noteworthy position. Certain points and observations made in these studies and echoes of these in the historical writing of the following decades, especially concerning the military dimension of the yörük presence in the Ottoman Balkans, will be discussed in the following sections. However, it is important to mention them here, however briefly and broadly, so as to visualize the studies on this issue. It should be mentioned that, although some European studies from the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries31 mention the existence of yörüks in various aspects, these are mainly

28 Halil İnalcık, "Ottoman Methods of Conquest," Studia Islamica 1954, no. 2 (1954). 29 Ibid., 103.

30 Ibid., 122.

31 Some of the early travelbooks and studies mentioned by Gökbilgin: William Martin Leake, Travels

in Northern Greece, 4 vols., vol. 3 (London: J. Rodwell, 1835).; Esprit Marie Cousinéry and Langlumé, Voyage Dans La Macédoine : Contenant Des Recherches Sur L'histoire, La Géographie Et Les Antiquités De

(35)

17

written as travelogues. Thus, their evaluations, though valuable to some extent, are written specifically according to these observations and from a rather narrow perspective. Moreover, these evaluations mainly revolve around the origins of the semi-nomadic population of the Balkans. For this reason, Čiro Truhelka’s article “Über die Balkan-Yürüken” can be considered the first study to focus on the Balkan

yörüks within their historical context.32 Through the kanunnâmes issued for them,

Truhelka outlines the yörüks’ way of life and their mutual relationship with the Ottoman state.

Following Truhelka, Salâhaddin Çetintürk describes the structure of the auxiliary forces composed of yörüks in Rumelia by means of introducing yörük registers for the first time33 simultaneously with Gokbilgin34. It should be added

that recent studies tend to refer to Çetintürk’s article as the initial study on this topic.

Ce Pays (Paris: Imprimerie Royale, 1831).; Jovan Cvijic, Grundlagen Der Geographie Und Geologie Von Mazedonien Und Altserbien Nebst Beobachtungen in Thrazien, Thessalien, Epirus Und Nordalbanien (Gotha: 1908).; Konstantin Jireček, Das Fürstentum Bulgarien: Seine Bodengestaltung, Natur, Bevöikerung, Wirtschaftliche Zustände, Geistige Cultur, Staatsverfassung, Staatsverwaltung Und Neueste Geschichte (Leipzig: 1891).; P. Traeger, "Die Jürüken Und Koniaren in Makedonien," Zeitschrift für Ethnologie 37, (1905).; Ernst Max Hoppe, "Die Yürüken," Internationales Archiv für Ethnologie 32, no. 3-4 (1934). (The original publication of this article is in English: Ernst Max Hoppe, "The Yuruks," Journal of the Royal Asiatic Society (New Series) 65, (1933).); James Baker, Karl Emil Franzos, and Ármin Vámbéry, Die Türken in Europa (Stuttgart: Levy & Müller, 1879).

For a review of these studies, see M. Tayyib Gökbilgin, Rumeli'de Yürükler, Tatarlar ve Evlâd-ı Fâtihân, İstanbul Üniversitesi Edebiyat Fakültesi Yayınlarından (İstanbul: Osman Yalçın Matbaası, 1957), 1-13. Although it is on yörüks of Anatolia, Bent’s anthropological study should also be mentioned among the early studies on yörüks: Theodore Bent, "The Yourouks of Asia Minor," The Journal of the Anthropological Institute of Great Britain and Ireland 20, (1891).

32 Ćiro Truhelka, "Über Die Balkan-Yürüken," Revue Internationale des Études balkaniques I, (1934-35). Here, the Turkish translation of it has been used, which is noted by Ahmed Temir, the translator, to be translated in 1936, though published much later: Ćiro Truhelka, "Balkan Yürükleri Hakkında," Türk Kültürü Araştırmaları 30, no. 1-2 (1992).

33 Salâhaddin Çetintürk, "Osmanlı İmparatorluğunda Yürük Sınıfı ve Hukuki Statüleri," Ankara

Üniversitesi Dil ve Tarih-Coğrafya Fakültesi Dergisi II, no. 1 (1943).

(36)

18

M. Tayyib Gökbilgin’s monography “Rumeli’de Yürükler, Tatarlar ve Evlâd-ı Fâtihân”35 can be considered the fundamental study on the yörüks in Rumelia. It

seems that Gökbilgin drew the outline of this study in his paper36 mentioned above,

in which he summarizes the structure of the yörük military organization in Rumelia. Focusing mainly on the military structure consisting of yörüks, Gökbilgin shows the nature of yörük groups within the military organization. Although the main focus is on military structure, certain demographic and social features are also touched upon. The existence of a yörük population in various settlements in Rumelia is evaluated through the regulations issued for them. The group of Kocacık yörüks is treated as an example, and the regulations in one of their registers together with an index of personal and place names are provided. An evalution of military organization is another dimension of this study. The changing structure of the organization, under the name of “Evlâd-ı Fâtihân”, is outlined in the final part of the study. Transliterations of some documents on the “Evlâd-ı Fâtihân” are also included in the book. In terms of sources, the study provides lists of documents on Rumelian yörüks, among which are yörük registers, entries from central registers (mühimmes), and certain other documents containing information about yörüks. In sum, it can be said that the study provides an overarching evaluation of the yörük organization from its beginnings to its dissolution. The importance of this study lies in the fact that succeeding studies on yörük organization in Rumelia have closely followed the basic points made by Gökbilgin. Among these main points are the establishment of the organization, its structure and units, the position of the

35 Gökbilgin, Rumeli'de Yürükler, Tatarlar ve Evlâd-ı Fâtihân. 36 Gökbilgin, "Rumeli'nin İskânında ve Türkleşmesinde Yürükler."

(37)

19

organization within the whole yörük population in the region, and their mutuality. The validity of these points as presented in this study will be discussed in the following chapters, particularly in the chapter focusing on the military organization of yörüks and its extent.

The most apparent impact of Gökbilgin’s monography can be observed in the studies published by Mehmet İnbaşı. İnbaşı’s article “Yeni Belgelerin Işığında Rumeli Yörükleri”37, which was published in the Osmanlı series, does not offer any

new dimensions, apart from some registers unused by Gökbilgin. It should be mentioned, however, that this article does give a more detailed picture of the Rumelian yörüks’ military organization. The included lists and tables are of some importance and are rather beneficial for observing the distribution of military units throughout various districts from the sixteenth to the seventeenth century. As a noteworthy detail, it should be noted that İnbaşı seems to have fallen into error in his evaluation of the yörük population due to his assumption that the yörük numbers given in yörük registers represented absolute numbers of yörüks in the regions in question. Another of İnbaşı’s articles about the yörüks in Rumelia is his paper presented at a symposium.38 This paper can be said to be more or less the

same as his previous article. Like the article, it provides information about separate

yörük groups under separate titles extracted from yörük registers. İnbaşı also has a

book entitled Rumeli Yörükleri (1544-1672)39, published in the same year as his

paper. It was not possible to see and make use of the book during the course of the

37 Mehmet İnbaşı, "Yeni Belgelerin Işığında Rumeli Yörükleri," in Osmanlı, ed. G. Eren et al., Toplum (Ankara: Yeni Türkiye Yayınları, 1999).

38 Mehmet İnbaşı, "Rumeli Yörükleri," in Anadolu'da ve Rumeli'de Yörükler ve Türkmenler, ed. Tufan Gündüz (Tarsus: Yör-Türk Vakfı, 2000).

(38)

20

present study, as İnbaşı himself informed the present author that no copy of this book is extant either in draft or in final form. His suggestion was to consult his article “Yeni Belgelerin Işığında Rumeli Yörükleri”, as it is a kind of summary of the book. This leads one to assume that his monography, were it extant, would add little to the literature on the question of the yörük presence in Rumelia. İnbaşı has another published paper, entitled “XVI-XVII. Yüzyıllarda Bulgaristan’daki Yörük Yerleşmeleri”, which was presented at a symposium.40 The points made above can

be said to be valid for this article as well, due to the fact that this paper bears significant resemblance to İnbaşı’s other studies.

The impact of Gökbilgin is also visible in Altunan’s studies. Her unpublished dissertation, entitled “XVI. ve XVII. Yüzyıllarda Rumeli Yürükleri ve Naldöken Yürük Grubu”41, follows Gökbilgin’s analysis of yörük groups. Structured in a similar

way to İnbaşı’s work, Altunan’s study takes the Naldögen yörük group as her case study. The paper, published in the proceedings of a symposium, outlines the data and relevant information obtained as a result of her research for her dissertation.42

Another paper presented by Altunan handles the data of the yörük group of Tanrıdağı in a similar manner43.

40 Mehmet İnbaşı, "XVI-XVII. Yüzyıllarda Bulgaristan’daki Yörük Yerleşmeleri," in Uluslararası

Osmanlı ve Cumhuriyet Dönemi Türk-Bulgar İlişkileri Sempozyumu (Eskişehir: Osmangazi Üniversitesi, 2005).

41 Sema Altunan, “XVI. ve XVII. Yüzyıllarda Rumeli Yürükleri ve Naldöken Yürük Grubu” (Anadolu Üniversitesi, 1999).

42 Sema Altunan, "XVI. Yüzyılda Balkanlar'da Naldöken Yürükleri: İdari Yapıları, Nüfusları, Askeri Görevleri ve Sosyal Statüleri," in Balkanlar'da İslâm Medeniyeti Milletlerarası Sempozyumu, ed. Ali Çaksu (Sofya: İslâm Tarih, Sanat ve Kültür Araştırma Merkezi, 2000).

43 Sema Altunan, "XVI. ve XVII. Yüzyıllarda Rumeli'de Tanrıdağı Yürüklerinin Askeri Organizasyonu," in Uluslararası Osmanlı ve Cumhuriyet Dönemi Türk-Bulgar İlişkileri Sempozyumu (Eskişehir: Osmangazi Üniversitesi, 2005).

(39)

21

Enver Şerifgil’s article “Rumeli’de Eşkinci Yörükler” also needs to be mentioned within the context of studies on the military organization of the

yörüks44. Şerifgil begins by looking at the social organization and way of life of the yörüks together with their sedentarization and demographic movements. He

proceeds to give examples and details about their organization according to the summary-type cadastral survey dated 1530 for the yörük group of Vize. The regulations issued for them are also included.

Apart from the studies above, which focus mainly on yörük military organization, Gyula Káldy-Nagy also deals briefly with the military aspect of the

yörüks in Rumelia as an auxiliary troop within the Ottoman military organization in

its early phases.45

Halil İnalcık’s article “The Yürüks: Their Origins, Expansion and Economic Role”46 is a very comprehensive study which essentially provides a detailed history

of the yörüks and their role in the socio-economic history of the Ottoman world. Starting with a theoretical discussion of the meaning and root of the word yörük and its differentiation from the term “Turkmen”, the study then concentrates on the influx of semi-nomadic groups into Anatolia and their role in demographic composition. Touching upon the yörüks’ position in the Ottoman Balkans and Anatolia, İnalcık gives information about the numbers of both those with a military

44 Enver Şerifgil, "Rumeli'de Eşkinci Yürükler," Türk Dünyası Araştırmaları Dergisi 12, no. 2 (1981). 45 Gyula Káldy-Nagy, "The First Centuries of the Ottoman Military Organization," Acta Orientalia

Academiae Scientiarum Hungaricae 31, no. 2 (1977).

46 The first publication: Halil İnalcık, "The Yürüks: Their Origins, Expansion and Economic Role," in

Oriental Carpet & Textile Studies Ii, ed. Walter B. Denny Robert Pinner(London: 1986). It is reprinted in a collection of İnalcık’s articles: Halil İnalcık, "The Yürüks: Their Origins, Expansion and Economic Role," in The Middle East and the Balkans under the Ottoman Rule, ed. Halil İnalcık(Bloomington: Indiana University Turkish Studies, 1993). The latter is used in this study.

(40)

22

association and those without. Tribal structure is another dimension dealt with in the study, followed by their economic activities and variations in them together with their influence, focusing particularly on carpet and kilim production. Thus, covering various themes and issues related to the semi-nomadic population of Anatolia and the Balkans both before and after the Ottoman state, the article presents a broad view of the yörüks. It should also be mentioned that, although a number of studies also touch upon the roots of the terms “yörük” and “Turkmen” and related theoretical issues, they are all more or less shaped according to İnalcık’s framework.

The theoretical dimension of the yörüks and their ways of life are also discussed as a separate issue in certain other works. One of these is İsenbike Arıcanlı’s study entitled “Osmanlı İmparatorluğu’nda Yörük ve Aşiret Ayrımı”.47 As

the title suggests, Arıcanlı focuses on the distinction between the terms yörük and

aşiret in terms of Ottoman usage. The reasons behind such a differentiation in the

ways of life and the relationship with the state of the nomadic/semi-nomadic groups are handled according to the different phases that they experienced. She stresses in the article that such a perception of differentiation was not peculiar to the Ottomans, but valid for the early stages of Mongolian history as well.

Şeydan Büyükcan Sayılır is another researcher who has written on the theoretical dimension of nomadic/semi-nomadic groups. In her very recent article “Göçebelik, Konar-Göçerlik Meselesi ve Coğrafî Bakımdan Konar-Göçerlerin

47 İsenbike Arıcanlı, "Osmanlı İmparatorluğu'nda Yörük ve Aşiret Ayırımı," Boğaziçi Üniversitesi

(41)

23

Farklılaşması”,48 Sayılır emphasizes the importance of geography in the economy of

non-sedentary groups and in the shaping of their cultures. Touching upon the evolution of nomadism in historiography and anthropology, Sayılır speculates about the terms “nomad” and “nomadism” together with the terms in the Ottoman and Turkish usage, the variety of these terms, and the differences between them. Following this, she deals with the differentiation of nomadic groups in terms of geography, concluding that a cultural difference emerges as a result of the geography and of economic varieties in connection with geographical differences.

Encyclopedia entries also make up some of the literature on the yörüks. Barbara Kellner’s “Yörük” article in Brill’s Encyclopedia of Islam49 and Vahit Çubuk’s

“Yörükler” article in the İslâm Ansiklopedisi edited by Turkish Ministry of National Education50 can be counted among these. The military organization of yörüks as

described by Çubuk is a kind of summary of Gökbilgin. İnalcık’s “Rumeli” article in

EI2 is noteworthy in that it situates the movement of the semi-nomadic population

within the context of the general demographic flow during the Ottoman expansion into the Balkans.51 Apart from these, there are also three articles published in the

section on Ottoman society in the Osmanlı encyclopedia. The first of these is İlhan Şahin’s “Göçebeler”.52 Şahin evaluates all the groups which can be categorized under

the concept of göçebe; that is, “nomad”. Their ways of life together with their

48 Şeyda Büyükcan Sayılır, "Göçebelik, Göçerlik Meselesi ve Coğrafî Bakımdan Konar-Göçerlerin Farklılaşması," Türk Dünyası Araştırmaları Dergisi 12, no. 1 (2012).

49 Barbara Kellner, "Yörük," in Encyclopedia of Islam, 2nd Edition(Leiden: E. J. Brill). 50 Vahid Çubuk, "Yörükler," in İslâm Ansiklopedisi(İstanbul: Milli Eğitim Bakanlığı, 1986). 51 İnalcık, "Rumeli."

(42)

24

interaction with the state and the regulations issued concerning form much of the article, and information regarding their social and administrative structures as well as their economic activities are provided as well. Also touched upon are the definitions of the terms yörük and “Turkmen” and their differences. The second article is Latif Armağan’s “Osmanlı Devleti'nde Konar-Göçerler”.53 Armağan

evaluates similar issues to those looked at in Şahin’s study. The third encyclopedia article is İnbaşı’s “Yeni Belgelerin Işığında Rumeli Yörükleri”54. Since this has

already been discussed earlier in this section, it is enough here to simply mention its title.

Studies based on the publication of archival materials constitute another branch of studies on semi-nomadic groups. Among these, Ahmet Refik’s collection of entries in the central registry (mühimmes) should be mentioned.55 The first

edition appeared as early as 1930. Although it is entitled Anadolu’da Türk Aşiretleri, it covers entries about yörüks not only in Anatolia but also in the Balkans. Since it is an early compilation, it does not involve all the entries about yörüks from the

mühimme registers. Kamil Su and İbrahim Gökçen published archival documents,

specifically court records, on specific regions. Su’s compilation Balıkesir ve Civarında

Yürük ve Türkmenler56 includes court records regarding yörüks from the region of

Balıkesir in northwestern Anatolia. Gökçen’s study 16. ve 17. Asır Sicillerine Göre

53 A. Latif Armağan, "Osmanlı Devleti'nde Konar-Göçerler," in Osmanlı, ed. G. Eren et al., Toplum (Ankara: Yeni Türkiye Yayınları, 1999).

54 İnbaşı, "Yeni Belgelerin Işığında Rumeli Yörükleri." 55 Refik.

(43)

25

Saruhan’da Yürük ve Türkmenler57 includes court records from the Saruhan district in

western Anatolia. Hikmet Şölen’s Aydın İli ve Yörükler58 is another study on the yörüks of western Anatolia and official records relating to them.

Although they cannot be considered among archival publications dealing specifically with yörüks, Barkan’s59 and Akgündüz’s60 kanunnâme compilations also

deserve mention for their inclusion of yörük regulations.

It should be added that there are some studies which are not exactly document publications but are based upon documentary content related to Anatolian yörüks and Turkmens. Orhan Sakin’s Anadolu’da Yörükler ve Türkmenler61, another edition of which came out later under the title 16. Yüzyıl Osmanlı Arşiv

Kayıtlarına Göre Anadolu'da Türkmenler ve Yörükler (Boylar-Kabileler-Cemaatler)62,

Cevdet Türkay’s Başbakanlık Arşivi Belgeleri'ne Göre Osmanlı İmparatorluğu'nda

Oymak, Aşiret ve Cemaatler63, and Yusuf Halaçoğlu’s Anadolu’da Aşiretler, Cemaatler, Oymaklar (1453-1650)64 can be mentioned among these kinds of studies. As their

titles suggest, these studies provide – though to differing extents – inventories of semi-nomadic groups in Anatolia primarily through the Ottoman fiscal registers;

57 İbrahim Gökçen, 16. ve 17. Asır Sicillerine Göre Saruhan'da Yürük ve Türkmenler (İstanbul: Marifet Basımevi, 1946).

58 Hikmet Şölen, Aydın İli ve Yörükler (Aydın: CHP. Basımevi, 1945).

59 Barkan, XV Ve XVI. Asırlarda Osmanlı İmparatorluğu'nda Ziraî Ekonominin Hukukî Ve Malî Esasları: 1.

Kanunlar.

60 Akgündüz.

61 Orhan Sakin, Anadolu'da Türkmenler ve Yörükler (İstanbul: Toplumsal Dönüşüm Yayınları, 2006). 62 Orhan Sakin, 16. Yüzyıl Osmanlı Arşiv Kayıtlarına Göre Anadolu'da Türkmenler ve Yörükler (Boylar-

Kabileler- Cemaatler) (İstanbul: Ekim Yayınları, 2010).

63 Cevdet Türkay, Başbakanlık Arşivi Belgeleri'ne Göre Osmanlı İmparatorluğu'nda Oymak, Aşiret ve

Cemaatler (İstanbul: Tercüman, 1979).

64 Yusuf Halaçoğlu, Anadolu’da Aşiretler, Cemaatler, Oymaklar (1453-1650), 6 vols. (Ankara: Türk Tarih Kurumu, 2009).

(44)

26

that is, the tahrir defters. The names of tribes and their tribal connections are provided together with their places of concentration and settlement. Thus, these studies present a kind of index of the yörük/Turkmen tribes, and for this reason can be considered archival studies.

As a general study on the mobile demographic elements of the Ottoman state, Reşat Kasaba’s study needs to be emphasized. A Moveable Empire: Ottoman

Nomads, Migrants and Refugees65 focuses on various dimensions of mobile elements,

from the foundation of the Ottoman entity through to the creation of the Turkish Republic. The study essentially evaluates the nature of the interaction and relationship between the state and mobile elements as well as the changes that occurred in these areas over time. Although Kasaba handles around eight centuries of Ottoman history, the period when close and good relationships between the state and the tribes were the norm is treated only briefly. The main concentration is the time period beginning with the settlement policy put into effect at the end of the seventeenth century. As the title of the study suggests, the book includes mobile elements such as refugees and migrants as well as those who became mobile as a result of long-lasting wars and their aftermath. Thus, the study presents a history of people on the move in the Ottoman state together with their changing relations with the state.

Some basic studies on the yörük/Turkmen population in Anatolia should also be mentioned so as to give a complete picture of the literature. Faruk Sümer has a number of articles on specific semi-nomadic groups. However, his article “XVI.

65 Reşat Kasaba, A Moveable Empire: Ottoman Nomads, Migrants and Refugees (Seattle; London: University of Washington Press, 2009).

Referanslar

Benzer Belgeler

The results of kinetic studies imply that a free radical reaction was very likely involved in the photolytic process of

Dimensions of the organizational culture (clan, adhocracy, hierarchy, market) will be regressed with the dimensions of the occupational pressures (work environment

Vega Convention Center Rixos Sungate,

1) A brief account of the establishment of Ottoman rule in Epirus. 2) A description and general characteristics of the Yanya (Ioanni- na) tahrir defters (taxation registers).

Roma’dan gelen Papanın §ahsi temsilcisi Augustîn Cardinal Bea/dün sabah Rum Ortodoks Parti rî ği Athenagoras'ı ziyaret etmiştir. C a r ­ dinal Bea,Partrik

[1] Dasgupta B, Mruthyunjaya TS. The Stewart Platform Manipulator: A Review, Mechanism and Machine Theory, Vol.. Design, Analysis and Fabrication of a Novel Three Degrees

Kırklareli University, Faculty of Arts and Sciences, Department of Turkish Language and Literature, Kayalı Campus-Kırklareli/TURKEY e-mail: editor@rumelide.com.. in any project,